"Dear All: I was shocked and sad to read in the TOI today that RSS leader, Mohan Bhagwat said, Mother Teresa's motive was conversion . Details on the internet.
If touching the untouchables, cleaning the unclean , feeding the unfed and bringing dignity in death to the dying is conversion, then I welcome conversion.
The truth is otherwise . Conversion was never Mother Teresa's focus, not that it matters given what she was all about. She was a Saint all the way and was a gift to India from Macedonia.
SHAME ON YOU BHAGWAT FOR WHAT YOU SAID. Even 100 of you put together cannot come close to what Mother Teresa did for the poor, untouchables and sick. Don't ridicule yourself any further."
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I always wondered how can any Muslim even follow a creep like Osama Bin Laden? Then comes this question, how can a Hindu with any common sense follpwGuru Golwalker? "Guru Golwalkar, the highly influential sarsangchalak of the organisation for nearly three decades, had identified three ‘internal threats’ to India — the Muslims, the Christians and the Communists." What's wrong with the common sense of my fellow Indians to consider this man a Guru?
For every Hindu ass, there is a Muslim ass.
Mike Ghouse - 49 links
Modi's stand on religious tolerance won't stop RSS anti-minority tirade
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The
reported statement by RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat that conversion to Christianity
was the real aim of Mother Teresa is hardly new. RSS ideologues have said this
repeatedly over the years, not just because they want to provoke a controversy
but also because they firmly believe it to be so. Mother Teresa — like Christian
missionaries in general — has been in the organisation’s sights for decades and
periodically someone reiterates this long-standing view. Yet, it is worth asking
why someone of Bhagwat’s stature in the larger Sangh parivar, whose utterances
are more or less policy statements for all its members, has seen it fit to bring
up the subject at this juncture.
Before
speculating on his motives, it will be worth considering the Sangh parivar’s
antipathy towards the Christians, who, after all, were just about 2.3% of the
country’s population according to the 2001 census. (Figures from the 2011 census
are yet to be officially released). Surely they are no threat to the 80% or so
Hindus of the country. The RSS does not see it that way.
Guru
Golwalkar, the highly influential sarsangchalak of the organisation for nearly
three decades, had identified three ‘internal threats’ to India — the Muslims,
the Christians and the Communists. He further writes about Indian Muslims and
Christians that: “Together with the change in their faith, gone are the spirit
of love and devotion for the nation. Nor does it end there. They have also
developed a feeling of identification with the enemies of this land. They look
to some foreign lands as their holy places.”
For
the RSS, the Christians, more than the Muslims, remain a more sinister influence
in some ways. The reason for that is simple. The Christians have made deeper
inroads into two areas that worry the RSS the most — religion and education. The
RSS is alarmed by the work of missionaries in remote areas, especially among
tribals — hence the attempts at ghar wapsi to bring them back into the Hindu
fold. Second, the presence of Christian schools all over the country, which, in
the opinion of Sangh members, has created large numbers of deracinated Indians
who have moved away from the Hindu ethos. These Indians — identified as English
speaking Macaulay putras — are seen as highly influential, allowing the
Christians to punch above their weight. Anti-Muslim prejudice runs deep in the
country; Christians, however, are seen as the ‘good minority’, educated, gentle
and service-oriented. This frustrates the RSS.
Mother
Teresa is the most potent symbol of that frustration. She is criticism proof,
given her international reputation as well as the deep admiration for her among
Indians. Even if some Indians think she was doing little more than saving souls
for Christianity — i.e. ‘converting’ them — the fact that she picked up lepers
and the terminally sick from the streets and looked after them till their death
is seen as selfless service of the kind others don’t do. For all their pieties,
no Hindu organisation can match up to her work. That has not stopped the RSS
from periodically attacking her. In 2003, an article in the RSS mouthpiece
Organiser demanded that the Indian government not send any representative to her
beatification ceremony. Bhagwat has thus merely reiterated a long-standing
position.
The
timing of his statement cannot be coincidental. On February 17, at an event
organised by a Christian church, Narendra Modi condemned the series of attacks
on churches in the capital and declared his government would not allow any
religious intolerance. This was his strongest statement on the subject so far,
and was immediately seen as a determined effort to put down the hate mongering
by members of his own party as well as those belonging to the various groups who
owe their allegiance to the Hindutva cause. Just days before that, United States
President Barack Obama had spoken about growing religious intolerance in India;
Modi’s speech was seen as a response to that criticism.
Bhagwat
couldn’t have liked this kind of ‘minority appeasement’ by Modi, who, after all,
has come up through the RSS ranks. Was the RSS chief, in his capacity as
chairman of the Sangh parivar board, letting everyone know that it was his word
that was final, whatever the prime minister may say? Within hours BJP
spokespersons were out in public defending not their PM but Bhagwat’s statement.
This should leave no doubt about the power hierarchy. Modi critics claim that
this is all a fixed match, a kind of ‘good cop bad cop’ strategy arranged
between the PM and the RSS. But his supporters are dismayed that the RSS is
tripping up the government’s focus on economic growth with these extraneous
issues.
Modi’s
stated resolve is not going to stop the anti-minority tirade. For the RSS and
its affiliates, ghar wapsi is not a gimmick, but a crucial activity to somehow
reconvert all those who have been converted by Christian — and also Muslim —
proselytisation. That decades of missionary preaching or education has not
turned India into a Christian land is something that escapes the notice of the
RSS — it thrives on creating a sense of victimhood among the majority.
The
latest bashing of Mother Teresa and conversions is also a signal that more
attempts will be made to introduce an anti-conversion Bill in Parliament. Modi’s
speech shows that he understands that he needs to reach out to minorities — his
own old rhetoric in Gujarat will no longer work. But with the RSS chief making
it clear where he — and therefore the rest of the Sangh parivar — stands, will
Modi be able to resist the pressure?
Sidharth
Bhatia is a senior journalist and author
The
views expressed by the author are personal
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